Bung Sidqy, thanks buat artikel-artikelnya...  bagus-bagus nih. Salam 
kenal, juga buat semuanya. Saya member baru nih, pengen belajar dan barangkali 
nanya dan diskusi nanti... 

--- On Tue, 6/3/08, sidqy suyitno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: sidqy suyitno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Keuangan] LEADER: The liberating effect of failure (Fortune Interview 
w Jeff Sonnenfeld of Yale)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tuesday, June 3, 2008, 3:01 PM










    
            May 29, 2008: 11:41 AM EDT

The liberating

effect of failure

http://money. cnn.com/2008/ 05/29/news/ newsmakers/ sellers_failure. 
fortune/index. htm?postversion= 2008052911 

Failure is the

crucible that makes a leader into a hero, says Yale's Jeffrey Sonnenfeld.

By Patricia Sellers,

editor-at-large

 

NEW YORK(Fortune) -- Jeffrey Sonnenfeld knows failure.

A professor at the Yale School of Management and founder of the non-profit

Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Sonnenfeld has risen to leadership-guru

status by becoming the expert on how CEOs stumble and bounce back. He first

explored failure 20 years ago in his book "The Hero's Farewell: What

Happens When CEOs Retire." Sonnenfeld's latest, "Firing Back: How

Great Leaders Rebound After Career Disasters," hits the topic head on.

Fortune editor at large Patricia Sellers talked with Sonnenfeld about what he

has learned studying failure. An edited version of their conversation:

What got you interested in failure?

I was up at Harvard teaching a career

management course. One of the assignments was a 30- to 60-page paper on

students' own lessons in their lives. The students kept volunteering awful

things that happened to them - abuse by a teacher or a crisis during a stint in

the Peace Corps where someone close to them died. These were young adults with

leadership potential.

And the field of failure was ripe for

discovery by someone like you?

Most of the leading literature was and is

obsessed with success. From Poor Richard's Almanac to Norman Vincent Peale's

Power of Positive Thinking, which says that the locus of control is with you.

Yes, that's nice. Deepak Chopra and Stephen Covey talk about mastering your

destiny. Today's self-help literature and prevailing psychologists stress

avoidant behavior - like Scarlett O'Hara saying "Tomorrow is another

day."

What's wrong with that?

They emphasize strategies for coping rather

than strategies for obliterating the source of the stress.

Does failure - or beating back failure -

make you a better person?

It makes a hero. Joseph Campbell wrote about

this. The hero has certain consistent qualities in every culture: a common

touch, a call to greatness, a critical trial and a setback. Failure punctuates

truly great leaders. They aren't great until they've failed. Failure is the

crucible, the test. They deal with it, and their confidence and capabilities

are enhanced.

How does this work in business?

[Home Depot (HD, Fortune

500) founders] Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank wore failure as a badge of

honor. They taught their employees about managing disappointment. There would

be no Vanguard if Jack Bogle hadn't been fired from Wellington Management. And

Jamie Dimon, after he was fired at Citigroup (C, Fortune

500), had the courage to run Bank One and now JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune

500) his way. He now has the cleanest balance sheet on Wall Street. Failure

empowers leaders to do things differently. It gives them courage to be

independent thinkers.

What lessons have you learned about failure?

First, fight, not flight. You have to face

up to battle. Second, recruit others in battle. Use networks effectively.

Third, rebuild your reputation.

Easier said than done.

If you did nothing wrong, you have to stand

up for exoneration. If you did something wrong, you have to go straight for

contrition. Prominent people tend to avoid that. Many people believe that

contrition weakens them. [Xerox (XRX, Fortune

500) CEO] Anne Mulcahy blows me away. She talks about setbacks in a way

that only makes her stronger.

What else do successful rebounders do?

They create a new purpose. Many people think

that prominent people rebound because they're wealthy and have access to

resources and great connections - or luck. No, it's the conscious choices they

make.

Who rebounded by crafting a new purpose?

Martha Stewart. She saw the frothing glee of

people who wanted to bring her down, and rather than be frightened and

chastened by that glee, it only motivated her more. She focused on defining

herself by her future, her comeback.

What's the No. 1 reason business bigwigs

fail to deal with failure properly?

They're afraid of looking weak. Everyone can

learn from [JetBlue (JBLU)

founder] David Neeleman, who has had the rug pulled out from under him a few

times. He has the confidence to ask questions about how to do things

differently. And he knows that if he's going to be a maverick, failure is going

to be a cost. He's comfortable talking about his setbacks and he's proud of his

Protean-like resilience.

Your parting wisdom, Jeff?

People who fail should feel liberated.

They've already failed. Get over it!



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke